Pam Ward
Water Rights
or Arizona v. Navaho Nation
How does it taste?
How do you drink-in
this glistening extinction?
How do you sleep?
Or wash your new car at night?
while buckets go empty
while mother’s eyes drip
while animals lick over rock.
Can’t you see?
Don’t you know what happens
when swollen breasts sag?
evaporating like hope
evaporating like peace from the planet
changing the rules, once again.
Oh, Colorado. Oh, river.
85 generations deep.
How do you sleep?
How can you stand to see the signs?
A railroad flashing its red Warning X!
as if daring someone to pass.
Daring us to blink.
Daring us to not twitch a feather.
Denying us access.
Drying up livestock or crop
Creating a nation of sunken
unquenchable want
as dry as the crunch of Ritz crackers.
Living somewhere between
life totally off the grid
and reneging the treaty, again.
_________________________________
Cynthia Hogue
the calculation
We measured the branch.
From that we calculated drought’s cost.
—Anon.
roasted in the sun to the color of burnished chestnut
it’d lain untouched in the dirt for weeks we couldn’t imagine why
the scale of the issue the fact of the mystery was infinitesimal
given the nature of shifting weather patterns the blam of drought
the reality no photo could capture the descent into a dispirited land
it was a kind of experiment
to ignore to demand proof beyond the self-
evident at last to discover
the balm for being too late to attend to earth in its burning
ash-shroud
From: Ultima Thule
8
Dreams of the well-armed charged
by anger, implacable, unintelligible.
Power rides the force that anger generates,
but it's subject to backslide, devolves
into bitter persistence when compassion fails.
Did it matter that we couldn't understand
the import of a glittering world, or how
it distracted us? What had we resolved
when we staggered from the ruins
of cruelty, bearing our green kindness?
In August
We walked down the hill lined with dots
of houses shuttered to the rising heat.
Ahead, fields like flattened wings,
vectors of green. A bakery
we’d noticed that morning
on the corner was empty inside,
but outside a scattering of tables on the terrace,
people bristling if one spoke
of the slant of chance,
the disaster foretold.
We’d thought it so far away
but here it was needing, among the odd
sad flotsam of humanity,
discipline. I held the tiny book of time
which I renamed the book of no-time.